Showing posts with label Advanced placement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Advanced placement. Show all posts

Friday, July 20, 2018

MD State Board of Ed. President: "Dubious move to reject Advanced Placement"

In a Fordham Institute article the president of the Maryland State Board of Education, Chester E. Finn, Jr. says:
Advanced Placement is about as close as American K–12 education has today to a gold standard—and as close as we come to a quality national curriculum at the intersection of high school and college. 
 https://edexcellence.net/articles/dubious-move-to-reject-advanced-placement
Although Mr. Finn does not identify himself as the president of the Maryland State Board of Education at the end of the article, readers can find his information at this link on the Maryland State Board of Education website.

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Rockville Patch: AP Scores at Rockville HS Lag Behind County

Rockville High Lags Behind County on AP Exams
School faces choice of high participation vs. high scores, principal says.

By Sean Sedam February 14, 2012

For Rockville High School principal Debra Munk, the approach to Advanced Placement comes with a choice: Open AP classes to only the best and the brightest students and passage rates on AP exams are most likely to be high. But encourage more students to take AP classes and the school’s scores are at risk.

“We have opted to give more kids the experience [of AP],” Munk said Tuesday.

Munk said she is “distressed” by Rockville High’s scores.

“However, we have put a great deal of effort in getting our kids exposed to AP,” she said.

Of the 283 members of the school’s Class of 2011, 111 (39.2 percent) earned a score of 3 or higher, according to scores released Wednesday by Montgomery County Public Schools. That lags behind the county (49.6 percent), but ranks ahead of the state (27.9 percent) and the nation (18.1 percent).


To read the whole Patch article, CLICK HERE.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Post Letter: Common Sense on Closing Suspension Gap

Washington Post, Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Letter to the Editor

...

"But we have removed many courses that these students can enjoy and learn from in favor of Advanced Placement and honors courses that students and parents feel are the only rigorous path to college. In many cases, technical arts and art and music have been axed because the schools say they cannot afford to keep them. In truth, the money is there, but the priority is to fund advanced courses. It is being entrenched in students’ minds as early as first grade that the only way to a successful, productive life is through college. If we give all kids — no matter their race — a reason to come to school and to learn how to achieve something of which they can be proud, suspension levels will fall."
G.P., Frederick

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Gazette: Achievement gap on AP scores grows in Montgomery County schools, as overall performance dips

GAZETTE: Wednesday, December 15, 2010: Achievement gap on AP scores grows in Montgomery County schools, as overall performance dips
by Andrew Ujifusa | Staff Writer

"The county school system touts the growing number of students taking Advanced Placement tests, but overall performance has declined recently and the achievement gap between racial groups has grown over the past five years."


Read the complete article at the Gazette website by clicking HERE.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Parent Alert - AP Test Registration

Montgomery County parents - get your checkbooks ready.  

From this month's MCPS Quicknotes:

Register for Upcoming Advanced Placement Exams

Registration for the Advanced Placement (AP) exams is going on now through March 15. Exams are scheduled for May 3–14; the cost of each AP test is $86. Students register for the exams through their high school. Funds are available for students who need assistance. For more information, students should contact their school counseling office or the school's AP coordinator.

Note - the fee is $86 per test.  Many schools tack on a "processing fee" but that's not required by the college board.  For those of you familiar with the Parents Coalition advocacy position, you should not be surprised to learn that we believe any surcharge is illegal.

The College Board doesn't have late fees and allows for exam cancellations and a refund of the test fee.   Here is what the College Board says about canceling an exam:

You may ask for a refund if you do not begin an exam for which you have paid. Local school policy determines the amount of the refund. You will probably be required to pay the $13 fee the school is charged for each unused exam. Once you begin an exam -- that is, write on an exam booklet or answer sheet -- you cannot receive a refund.


So, when your child comes home with a bill for more than $86 per test, or your school says that you can't get a refund if your child changes his or her mind, ask what happens to the fee.  The College Board already includes a $8 rebate that is returned to the school for each test, so why does any school need a surcharge?  Why does a school keep the $73 dollars if a student cancels? 



Tuesday, October 13, 2009

The Case for Rigorous Curriculum Revision in Montgomery County

School
2005-2006 GT
2007 Math Adv
2007 Reading Adv
School A
80.4
45.8
47.5
School B
75.9
55.6
42.6
School C
69.4
59.6
40.4
School D
67.4
76.7
56.8
School E
62.1
57.1
39.1
School F
57.8
72.7
65.2


Reproduced on the left, is a table based on MCPS data, listing the six schools with the top GT identification rates in 2005-2006. Since this identification is based on Global Screening in second-grade, these students took the third grade MSAs, a State of Maryland assessment, the following academic year (2007). Based on mobility figures released by the school system, one can reasonably expect the third grade MSA results for the following year to correspond to roughly the same group of students.

It doesn't take a mathematics maven to reach a simple conclusion: schools that claim a large number of gifted and talented students don't necessarily produce the highest performers on the MSA tests.

According to the Harvard University Public Education Leadership Project (PELP), "MCPS was inspired by a case study on the New York City Police Department's Computerized Crime Comparison Statistics (ComStat). Based on ComStat, MCPS developed M-Stat, a process designed to—

  • thoroughly analyze individual school and student data;
  • consistently and continuously monitor the data;
  • identify best practices; and
  • create lasting systemic change."
Harvard goes on to say, "This process is intended to serve as a model and permeate every level of the school district, from—

  • frank discourse among the executive leadership team and the superintendent; to
  • open discussion among principals and their supervising community superintendents; to
  • honest examination of the school data between principals and their communities; to
  • authentic conversations among teachers and the principal; to
  • the nexus of true school reform—the interactions between the students and the teacher." [underlining mine]
Somehow, the expensive M-Stat system failed to achieve its stated goals. An "honest examination of school data" is next to impossible given the reticence of the school system to release its data (a Public Information Act request for data is still pending—approximately six-months after submission).

It is no secret that the Montgomery County school system subscribes to a dismally low threshold for the identification of the gifted and talented: the 75th percentile rank in Raven (see here), when Renzulli, whose methodology is embraced by the school system, recommends percentiles in the ~90s. An "honest examination of school data," would have alerted even the most somnambulant dilettante that something was awry in our fair county. According to the Examiner's Leah Fabel, Marty Creel, the County's director of gifted and talented programming had insisted "We're not identifying these kids as geniuses, but as ready to work above grade level," adding that "the county has made remarkable progress in getting students to that mark."

The County School system, in the latest incarnation of its Strategic Plan, on page 12, reasserts its goal of providing "an Effective Instructional Program." If a system-wide average of 40.7% of students were performing at an above-grade level in 2005-2206 (according to MCPS data), the natural response would have been to recognize that nearly half the student body would find the established curriculum lacked rigor and challenge. The consequence should have been a roll-out of a much more rigorous, "effective instructional program." Not so in Montgomery County, we are middling through a curriculum that the school system admits isn't challenging for nearly half our kids.

Isn't Mr. Creel tacitly drawing attention to the reality that school administrators have failed to adequately respond to the curricular needs of our children? The school system graduation rate has fallen to its lowest level in more than a decade, to 11th among Maryland's school divisions. Again, aren't we seeing the tangible consequences of a failure to implement an "effective instructional program?"

The oft repeated mantra that the school system has somehow been focused on addressing the achievement of minorities is also not holding true. According to the Washington Post, "there is less attention paid to some more traditional measures of educational accomplishment, such as taking the SAT and receiving a diploma. On those measures, the achievement gap has not narrowed but widened.

Graduation rates are lower for blacks (84 percent) and Hispanics (78 percent) than for whites and Asians (95 percent). The disparity is larger now than five years ago. " This for a school system, that boasted the highest expenditure per pupil in the State of Maryland (according to 2007 MSDE data).

In Harvard's RAISING ACHIEVEMENT AND CLOSING GAPS IN WHOLE SCHOOL SYSTEMS: RECENT ADVANCES IN RESEARCH AND PRACTICE, on page 38, one finds the statement "Deputy Superintendent Lacey responded that Dr. Weast drives the district's approach: 'He is not afraid to be honest; he is not afraid to disclose data;'" which makes the district's refusal to release data all the more inexplicable.



LEA Name
Wealth Per Pupil
Expenditures Per Pupil
Instruction Staff Per Thousand
Prof Support Staff Per Thousand
Instruction Assist Per Thousand
Montgomery
490607
12647
70.5
12
16.3
Worcester
757781
11907
84.2
11.8
28.4
Somerset
193971
11308
80.8
10.9
21.5
Howard
372982
11232
73.4
12.4
24.2
Kent
404349
11105
75.6
10.8
19.5
Dorchester
250094
11004
74.1
11.6
12.6
Baltimore City
170179
10974
72
13.3
19.8
All Public Schools
318810
10371
69.6
11.3
15.3
Baltimore County
337668
10079
71.6
11.7
10.1
Allegany
189864
10063
78.3
13.1
19.7
Anne Arundel
402415
9814
67.9
11.1
12.4
Garrett
294643
9800
78.6
8.9
16.9
Calvert
281699
9745
61.3
9.8
19.3
Prince George's
235209
9699
68
11.1
11.6
Talbot
645227
9697
68.3
10.7
7.9
Wicomico
216405
9692
75.9
10.4
29.1
Cecil
241918
9402
70.4
10.5
14.4
Carroll
272870
9278
68.6
11.1
12.4
Frederick
277483
9267
65.2
9.8
14.8
Saint Mary's
255632
9263
61.5
10
15
Charles
250746
9246
62.4
9.9
14.2
Queen Anne's
366636
9213
64.4
8.9
13.5
Washington
250893
9127
67.5
9.4
11.9
Harford
267832
9104
70
10.1
16.8
Caroline
190934
9035
69
10.7
18.9
Baltimore City - Edison


55
4.8
32.3


It is my belief that Montgomery County needs a rigorous, challenging curriculum revision, preceded by a honest, open, dialogue with all stakeholders—not just a chosen few. By stating that the revision process itself must be rigorous and challenging, I am asserting, among other things, the need for a well researched, carefully articulated revision process that must overcome the tough challenges it will necessarily face. Part and parcel of this revision must be the implementation of an effective gifted and talented identification system commensurate with established standards and norms. Furthermore, the programs for all learners, exceptionally advanced learners included, must be explicitly stated and publicly available.

Harvard University can contribute to the conversation (1) by accepting my invitation to provide the data, on which they base their assessments of MY school system, and (2) undertaking rigorous studies of educational systems with an independent, peer-reviewed analysis rather than simply reproducing the claims of school systems and their surrogates.